Metalwork Design thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level D , Case 94, Shelf G, Box 43

Metalwork Design

1820
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

A drawing of a silver sauce tureen by Edward Hodges Baily, circa 1820. Bombee shaped body on scrolling feet from which oak leaves spring, acanthus handles and a handle on the cover.
Profile, Full size, 170 x 257.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Pencil, pen and ink and brown wash on wove paper. The sheet is watermarked 1806.
Brief description
A design for a silver sauce tureen by Edward Hodges Baily (1788- 1867), of a type made circa 1819
Physical description
A drawing of a silver sauce tureen by Edward Hodges Baily, circa 1820. Bombee shaped body on scrolling feet from which oak leaves spring, acanthus handles and a handle on the cover.
Profile, Full size, 170 x 257.
Dimensions
  • Height: 510mm
  • Width: 314mm
Style
Gallery label
Object history
A tureen of this design is in the Victoria and Albert Museum, 473 to B-1864. It has a different handle from that shown in the design and it bears the maker’s mark of Paul Storr and is dated 1819-20.

This design is on folio 1 recto in an album containing 55 designs drawn directly on 27 sheets (sometimes several to a page), for gold and silver plate, including wine-coolers, tureens, inkstands, a teapot, a kettle, candelabra etc., related to the production of the Royal goldsmiths Rundell, Bridge and Rundell between c.1809 and c.1820. (E.70- 124-1964) The album pages are of white wove paper watermarked 1806, full-bound in blue leather, gold tooled, lettered on the spine ‘Designs for Plate etc. by John Flaxman’. With the bookplate of John Roland Abbey (1894 –1969). Bound by William Wood. The back fly- leaf is inscribed “JA, 1070/ 13:9:1935”. All the drawings are by one hand, most probably that of the sculptor Edward Hodges Baily. He became a pupil of John Flaxman in 1807, at a time when Flaxman was designing silver for Rundell, Bridge and Rundell. He joined Rundell Bridge and Rundell in 1815 as “a modeller and designer” and in 1826 became its chief modeller and designer. In 1833 he began working for the firm of Storr and Mortimer. Some of the drawings are most probably copies by Baily of his own designs, while others are copied or adapted from designs by John Flaxman and Thomas Stothard, as well as other, anonymous, designers. The clean condition of the album, and the range of dates of the pieces shown, in addition to their unchronological arrangement, suggest that the album was made as a fair-copy record of pre-existing design drawings, all made about 1820, although some of the drawings seem also have been used as part of a design process. The drawings copied from John Flaxman and Thomas Stothard imitate the graphic styles of the originals. The album was bought from Marlborough Rare Books on 24th March 1964 for 550 pounds.
Subjects depicted
Bibliographic reference
Victoria & Albert Museum Department of Prints and Drawings and Department of Paintings, Accessions 1964. London: HMSO, 1965. C. Oman, "A Problem of Artistic Responsibility: The Firm of Rundell, Bridge and Rundell, Apollo Magazine, March 1966, p.174- 183. Bury, S. (1966) "The lengthening shadow of Rundell's", Connoisseur Magazine CLXI, no.648, p.79; no.649, p.152; no.650, p.218.
Collection
Accession number
E.70-1964

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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